The side length of the square is about 3.54 units using Pythagoras' theorem for a right angle triangle
Using Pythagoras' theorem each side will be 6.363961031 units in length.
lenght times width times height There is no formula. Length is a linear measurement using appropriate units.
Using Pythagoras' theorem each side measures 3.536 units rounded to 3 decimal places
Using Pythagoras' theorem it is 17 units in length
The side length of the square is about 3.54 units using Pythagoras' theorem for a right angle triangle
Using Pythagoras' theorem each side will be 6.363961031 units in length.
Using Pythagoras' theorem: 252-152 = 400 and the square root of this is 20 units in length.
Area of circle: 18pi Radius of circle: square root of 18 = 3 times square root of 2 Using Pythagoras' theorem each side of the square is 6 units in length
lenght times width times height There is no formula. Length is a linear measurement using appropriate units.
Using Pythagoras' theorem which says that the square on the hypotenuse (in this case the diagonal) is equal to the sum of the squares on the other two sides (which in the case of a square would be equal in length). so if the diagonal measured 10 units, the square on the diagonal would be 100 square units. And as this = 2*the squares on the other sides, the square on one side would be 100/2 = 50 square units. As a square has sides of equal length the square on one side is actually the area of the square. i.e. the area of a square with a diagonal of 10 units is 50 square units. or generically the area of a square with a diagonal of length 'x' = (x2)/2
Using Pythagoras' theorem each side measures 3.536 units rounded to 3 decimal places
Using Pythagoras's theorem the hypotenuse is the square root of 2 units of length
Using Pythagoras' theorem it works out as 10.5 units of measurement
To find the length of the diagonal of a square with an area of 64 square units, we first need to calculate the side length of the square. Since the area of a square is side length squared (A = s^2), we can find the side length by taking the square root of the area (s = √A). In this case, the side length of the square is 8 units. To find the length of the diagonal, we can use the Pythagorean theorem, which states that the square of the length of the hypotenuse of a right triangle is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides (a^2 + b^2 = c^2). Since a square can be divided into two right triangles with the diagonal as the hypotenuse, we can calculate the diagonal length using d = √(s^2 + s^2), where d is the diagonal length and s is the side length. Substituting the side length of 8 units into the formula, we get d = √(8^2 + 8^2) = √(64 + 64) = √128 = 8√2 units. Therefore, the length of the diagonal of a square with an area of 64 square units is 8√2 units.
To find the area of a square with a diagonal of 14, we first need to determine the length of one side of the square. Using the Pythagorean theorem, we can calculate that the side length is 7√2. Then, we can find the area of the square by squaring the side length, which gives us 98 square units.
Yes. A square with sides of 5 units.